• INTR0 - MIND THE MAP
  • 1. THE PINCH
  • 2. NEEDLE’S EYE
  • 3. CARTOGRAPHER
  • 4. THE JOURNEY
  • 5. SATURN’S NORTH POLE
  • 6. AMOC
  • 7. TOKAMAK
  • 8. THE ATLAS
  • 9. H HIERACHY
  • 10. THE CORNER THEOREM
  • 11. DNS
  • 12. CARBON REDUCTION
  • 13. EPILOGUE

12. CARBON REDUCTION

Carbon capture works — but it carries a catastrophic energy penalty, consuming 15 to 25 percent of a power station's entire output just to run the capture equipment, because the current amine-based architecture requires continuous driving: pump, heat, release, cool, repeat, forever, and the moment you stop it reverts. This document proposes a fundamentally different architecture, grounded in a proved mathematical theorem and confirmed across 24 fluid simulations: rather than continuously forcing organisation onto a fluid, establish the right geometry once and let the physics hold it. The SFVFS™ DNS programme demonstrated that when an incompressible fluid is placed in the correct geometric container, it has no choice but to self-organise into a specific hexagonal pattern — not as a tendency, but as a mathematical necessity — and critically, that pattern persists through a ten-thousand-fold drop in energy, holding its position to within 0.034 degrees across an entire extended run, and organising CO₂ into the same geometric structure as water and glycerol regardless of chemistry. The Corner Theorem provides the proved foundation: incompressibility forces the geometry, the geometry forces the pattern, and the pattern implies the geometry — locked together with no room for exception. The honest boundaries are clearly stated: this is not a working technology, industrial scale has not been tested, and the engineering distance is real, estimated at fifteen to twenty-five years to deployment if the right people engage with it. The data, simulations, and theorem are all freely available. Take it. Test it. Build on it.

NEXT SECTION

13. EPILOGUE

PLAIN ENGLISH VERSION

SFVFS_Carbon_PlainEnglish 3 (pdf)Download

ACADEMIC VERSION

SFVFS_Seg12_CarbonReduction_v1 (pdf)Download

GRIGORI PERELMAN

Grigori Perelman (1966–) Russian mathematician who solved the Poincaré Conjecture between 2002 and 2003, posting his proof in three papers on arXiv with no journal submission. His approach used Richard Hamilton's Ricci flow with surgery to resolve not just the Poincaré Conjecture but the full Geometrisation Conjecture. He declined the Fields Medal in 2006 and the Millennium Prize of $1 million in 2010, having withdrawn from academic life entirely. The only person to have solved a Millennium Problem. The prize remains uncollected.

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